Tuesday, December 21, 2010

My latest commentary, a holiday reflection, “Give thanks to our veterans,” published in Washington Examiner on December 20, 2010. Also published in the San Francisco Examiner on December 22, under the title, “Give thanks to the men, women who make our freedom possible.” Neither is available online as of 2016; below is the pre-publication text.

Navy SEAL (Sea, Air, Land) Lt. Michael P. Murphy

This holiday season,
consider the gift of freedom our veterans and today’s servicemen and women have
given our nation – communities, families and each one of us, individually.

It’s a reality
veterans’ service organizations work tirelessly to honor throughout the
year.

For instance, every
November, American Veterans Centers brings heroes of wars
past and present together for a weekend of remembrance, reliving epic battles
that recall freedom’s price.

This year’s
conference, sponsored by Washington
Examiner,
featured legends from Doolittle Raiders; Band of Brothers; Tuskegee Airmen; and Major League Baseball players who fought in WWII, including recently deceased Hall of Famer Bob Fellerand many decorated veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan and their families.

Their stories were
profound.

Ed “Babe” Heffron recalled
Operation Market Garden – when, at the height of World War II, he and his team
parachuted into Holland to liberate the Dutch people from Hitler’s brutal
totalitarian grip. His was the famous
“Band of Brothers”
– E (Easy) Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th parachute
infantry, assigned to the U.S. Army’s 101st Airborne Division – immortalized in the
HBO series, based on Stephen Ambrose’s book, Band of Brothers: E Company, 506th
Regiment, 101st Airborne from Normandy to Hitler's Eagle's Nest.

Dutch resistance members with troops of the US 101st Airborne in front of Eindhoven cathedral during Operation Market Garden in September 1944

He’ll never forget that
Dutchman, who compared losing his freedom to the day his mother “got pushed off
a bike,” their only means of transportation. “When you hear the word freedom,”
this deeply grateful Dutch citizen told Heffron, “think about losing it. It’s
when you lose it that it means everything.”

Freedom? All Heffron and his buddies could think about
in the plane over was: “What the hell am I doing up here? I could be back home having a soda or
standing on the corner with the guys…”

Soda was no equal. “When
you saw the faces of those Dutch people and the children,” Heffron intoned, “you
knew (raising voice) why you were
there, you knew why you did what you
had to do. I’m telling you, if you ever
get in that predicament, you’ll know why you’re there. Just the look on their
faces was everything.”

Medal of Honor
recipient Marine Colonel Harvey C. “Barney” Barnum, honored for his valor in
Vietnam at the awards banquet, emphasized, “we’re still at war,” and offered “a
prayer for those soldiers, seamen, airmen and marines who are on point
tonight.”

He’s right. We should
pray for those who are still fighting, and have fought, in Iraq and
Afghanistan, who now suffer from the wounds of war. And, for those who have paid the ultimate
price – heroes like Navy SEAL Lieutenant Michael P. Murphy, who died in
Afghanistan on June 28, 2005, while trying to save his team on a mission deep in the Hindu Kush Mountains
to find a key Taliban leader. After letting goat herders go, they soon found themselves outnumbered
by Taliban forces, attacking from a superior tactical position. Lt. Murphy, in a final bid to save his men, entered the fighting space to
call rescue forces with a clear signal – saying "Thank you," before hanging
up, immediately suffering the fatal blow.

Lt. Murphy’s father Daniel recounted the
heartwarming visit – a private Oval Office meeting – he and his wife Maureen
had with President George W. Bush on October 22, 2007, the day he awarded their
firstborn the Medal of Honor – the first of the present wars to be so honored.

“No matter how the press plays this,”
the President told them, “you should know that the loss and the death of each
and every one of my men effects me deeply.” Then, humorously, he proceeded to undress and
put their gift – Michael’s dog tags – around his neck, then got dressed again, exclaiming,
“OK, now we’re ready to go.” After the
ceremony, breaking protocol, he “grabs us on the red carpet... squeezes us and
says ‘Murphs you did good, but I… thought I did even better because I had
Michael right next to my heart.’”

About Me

I am a writer and producer. My book, "Oasis: Conversion Stories of Hollywood Legends," was published in 2015 in the United States and in Spain in 2016 under the title "También Dios pasa por Hollywood." Also, see me on Twitter @maryclairerose and Linked In.